People v. Feldman

73 Misc. 2d 824, 342 N.Y.S.2d 956, 1973 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2018
CourtCriminal Court of the City of New York
DecidedApril 17, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 73 Misc. 2d 824 (People v. Feldman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Criminal Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Feldman, 73 Misc. 2d 824, 342 N.Y.S.2d 956, 1973 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2018 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

Julian Hertz, J.

Five separate charges have been tried on a consolidated basis accusing defendant with obstructing the sidewalk in violation of section 755(2)-7.0 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York. Trial was also had on a single charge of littering in violation of section 153.01 of the Health Code of the City of New York.

Testimony at the trial included that given by two New York City police officers who summoned the defendant on various occasions in the fall of 1971. Significantly, in her brief in support of acquittal defendant concedes what was amply demonstrated at trial; the placement of furniture on the sidewalk in front of the store and residential premises at 148 West 4th Street, New York City. Defendant qualifies her concessions, however, by her claim that the furniture was up against the front of the building and did not extend beyond the stoopline ”. These quoted words omit the undisputed fact that the area of admitted occupancy (as demonstrated by reference to her submitted sketch of the immediate and surrounding location) involved at least five feet four inches of the space measured perpendicularly from the front of the stained glass workshop which she and her family operate at the stated address for the manufacture of Tiffany shades and panels made of Tiffany glass.

Additional background to this matter is found in the fact that defendant and her family occupy an apartment above the store. [825]*825Although it is not in any way considered determinative of the result, it is noted that on cross-examination defendant admitted that the furniture placed on the sidewalk in front of the store, and which will be referred to in detail hereafter, sometimes encroached beyond an imaginary line drawn along the length of the sidewalk and which was referred to as the “ stoop ” line (and was, as afore-mentioned, five feet four inches from the storefront).

From the testimony it is clear that the furniture (at least some of which was regularly placed on the sidewalk) included a rug, stuffed chair, an old. barber chair, a sofa and/or a low car seat and three folding chairs. Defendant herself also indicated the occasional presence of a long low coffee table, a low moveable bookshelf extending about four feet from the storefront, as well as various games which were played alfresco by various persons, including the defendant, her family and invitees. She also referred to October 1, 1971, one of the dates here in question, at which time plants were placed on a U-shaped table top, and to a potted tree and ivy plants hanging from the store awning. She and other of her witnesses repeatedly asserted that none of these assorted items projected beyond the imaginary line of the stoops located elsewhere on the block and that the remaining unobstructed approximately eight-foot width of the sidewalk sufficed to permit two and perhaps four persons to walk abreast and pass the store on unobstructed sidewalk (although she admitted some might be compelled to step on the rug).

Despite the insistence of the defendant and her witnesses that the sidewalk was unobstructed in its outer limits (between the imaginary stoop line and the curb), the police officers who testified told a different story. Thus, Patrolman Skrapatis who issued four of the summonses in question on separate occasions (wholly without regard to the supposed significance or lack thereof of the stoop line) and according to his recollection, stated the conditions at the store on each occasion were quite static.

His version was that the furniture found on the sidewalk covered an area approximately 7 feet by 10 feet (the said 7-foot dimension extending from the storefront toward the curb). He testified that on each occasion on which a summons was issued by him defendant was present and there were people present seated on the sofa or on the easy chair. For example, on September 28, 1971, when he responded to the scene on a complaint, he saw four or five persons lounging about and on one [826]*826occasion he observed a man taking a shower with a hose connected to a water source within the store.

Then, too, there was testimony that defendant cooked food on a stove placed on the sidewalk. .Skrapatis testified to daily observation (during his five-day weekly duty schedule) for about a year in the course of his patrol duties. He specifically stated that passersby were sometimes forced to step off the curb to pass the store without encountering furnishings.

It is to be noted he stated that on two occasions he asked defendant (perhaps suggestively) if the garbage truck was expected to haul away the personalty which he, it appears, did not credit with substantial value.

Patrolman Reid issued one of the sidewalk obstruction summonses on October 1, 1971. He testified that the furniture intruded on three quarters of the sidewalk which he estimated was 12 feet wide (in contrast to defendant’s sketch based on alleged actual measure showing a width of 13 feet 10 inches). The witness stated, further, that the articles placed on the sidewalk extended over the entire sidewalk to the curb, and reached beyond the lateral limits of the store. He confirmed his presence on the other dates when Patrolman Skrapatis issued process and specifically placed the bookcase at the curb-line asserting, also, that other items of furniture intruded beyond the imaginary stoop line.

The charges in question are founded on alleged violations of section 755(2)-7.0 of the Administrative Code entitled ‘ ‘ Littering Prohibited ”. Defendant urges that her placement of furniture on the sidewalk in furtherance of the pursuit of casual living is not within the purview of that section. She insists on strict construction of the law and its inapplicability here, while conceding that she may not have an unlimited legal right to encroach on the sidewalk. Additionally, she contends that the described use of the area in front of her home is characteristic and a part of life in New York City.

This court finds as a fact the described condition of the sidewalk on the dates and hours specified in the summonses was, beyond a reasonable doubt, established to be violative of the statutory inhibition against obstructions. Further, this court is unimpressed with the contention that the defendant has the legal right to encumber the sidewalk either within or beyond the imaginary “ stoop ” line. Nor does the court perceive any basis in law or in the social fabric for the maintenance of such intrusions on what is plainly a part of the public domain.

■Subdivision 2 of section 755(2)-7.0 of the Administrative Code provides: “ 2. Every owner, lessee, tenant, occupant or [827]*827person in charge of any building or premises shall keep and cause to be kept the sidewalk, flagging and curbstone abutting said building or premises free from obstruction and nuisances of every kind, and shall keep said sidewalks, air shafts, area-ways, backyards, courts and alleys free from garbage, refuse, rubbish, litter and other offensive material.” It is, perhaps, significant that the section adverts to nuisances which are also inhibited thereby. There is, of course, substantial legal precedent for proceedings to compel the abatement of a nuisance, and defendant appears to concede, that an action for that relief might lie on the evidence educed herein. That recognition, real or fancied (if, indeed, the court presumes in that respect), is damaging to her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 Misc. 2d 824, 342 N.Y.S.2d 956, 1973 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-feldman-nycrimct-1973.